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[personal profile] shadowkat
I'll probably regret this post in the morning, then again maybe not. One never knows. About posts that this. One of the many hazards of writing and/or posting on the inter-webs. Some people never regret what they post. I envy that. Of course they don't tend post the silly things or post without editing first, I do. So there is that.

Reading Good Reads discussion threads and ahem Mark Watches review of Smashed (wish I hadn't, although his reaction I saw coming a mile away) this week...made me realize something, no matter where you go on the interwebs to discuss stuff, you will face the same people - no not the same "people" but the same...well posting personas. And dealing with them is a tricky business, particularly if you are like me, not that you are of course (perhaps I should stop using the personal pronoun you? Be safer at any rate), and have a tendency to fall into the same behavioral pattern yourself.


1. Trigger Boy or Trigger Girl - You've met this guy or gal. You may be them. (I was at different points - we are all to a degree, but there are extremes, and the extreme is the person who basically is nothing but one big trigger. The whole show is about them!). You'll be knee deep in a debate about a favorite character, and all of a sudden they tell you that wait - they were raped. Or abused by their ex-boyfriend. Or beaten by their parents. Or witnessed it. Or an evil boss bullied them. And the abuser/rapist/bully bares an uncanny behavioral resemblance to the character and/or relationship you happen to be debating. "This is a trigger for me" - they'll state. Or "You have to understand _____________ relationship reminds me of the abusive relationship I had with my ex. Who (raped/beat/abused) me for (period of time)." Then they will go into graphic detail. (For a recent example of Trigger Boy go to Mark Watches review of Smashed. Pretty much covers it. MARK is the poster child for "Trigger Boy". Trigger Boy/Girl perceives everything through an emotional lense and often relates it all back to their own horrible past. Note in most cases, they are happy now, and the abuse they are discussing is long over. ).

What to do? Back away slowly and do not engage. No good will come of it. You will look like a nasty bitca. And you're discussion successfully derailed. It's no longer objective, it's subjective. And it's emotional.

Although rest assured someone will engage them.

2. The Pedant or Grammar Nerd - Grammar Nerd will hijack your argument by correcting your punctuation, grammar, or syntax. Others may join in. Before long you have an entire discussion about whether your sentence was grammatically correct. Your whole argument is forgotten. And if you post again? You are self-conscious and want to have someone edit every post.

There's a lovely thread on Good Reads that demonstrates this: Effectively Slayed By Grammar Nerds on Good Reads. Read it, it's the most extreme instance of the grammar nerd that I've seen.
Possibly because the thread is about grammatical mistakes in Twilight, so that alone will attract every bored grammar nerd on the site.

How to handle? Politely thank them for correcting your grammar. And ask if they would like to be your personal beta for the duration? You can email all your posts to them so they can personally edit them first.

3. The Holier-than-Thou Culture Police: They like to attack fans for loving controversial characters, relationships, stories, and books. And will disparage anything that appears to them to be misogynistic, sexist, homophobic, racist, etc. From their perspective - all cultural items must be politically correct.

They will often state that a book is offensive to women and shouldn't be published. Or that fans of a character are sick or there's something wrong with them. Often they'll state that what disturbs them most is a fan loves an "obviously" abusive relationship or bad boyfriend and there's a risk this poor deluded soul will seek them out in reality. Another complaint? That the show or book or film is racist, misogynistic, or homophobic. They do not understand how it is possible that people see books or tv shows differently. Obviously this is racist, they will state, and if you can't see it? This is anti-femist! This is offensive to all women! If you can't see it? You are either a fool or racist/anti-feminist or misogynistic too.

How to handle? Do not engage. Back away slowly. No good will come of it.

4. The Culture Vulture: This person considers anything that is not "quality" as they define it - crap and should not be watched or read. They will mock it. They will say how it is beneath them. They will rant about how badly written it is. Filled with grammatical errors. Or it's a bad show.

How to handle? Do not engage. Back away slowly. There's no win here.

5. The Snark: This persona likes to make fun or mock things. They are quick with a one-liner. It's often sarcastic. (I unfortunately am guilty of this, although it is fun.)
And this is often used as either a defense mechanism or it's meant as a joke. There are degrees...though, the extreme version is really nasty and mean - see TWOYP thread for an example. That site attracts a lot of snarks.

How to handle: Don't take them seriously. And don't engage. Or..snark back. Make fun together, keep it light.

6. The Cheerleader - this persona loves everything. Squees about everything. Wants everyone to like them. They are chatty and nice, and often post GIPs. They also cheer on underdogs.

How to handle: Stay positive. Don't make fun of them. And trade GIPs.

7. The Devil's Advocate: They love to argue. They will literally debate anything. You have no idea what their true stance is. They often argue both.

How to handle: Don't get emotional. Stick with rational argument.

8. Emo Girl or Boy: They get emotional over everything. Take everything personally. Can't see sarcasm at all. And will often provide hugs at the end of every post. And are highly empathetic to others. They don't tend to deal with the Snark or Devil's Advocate very well. And are combustible when you put them with Emo Boy or Girl.

How to handle: Difficult. Depends on the situation and who they are up against. In most cases, they are lovable souls. But avoid snarking to them at all costs, and try to keep them away from the Devil's Advocate.

9. The Expert: This person knows EVERYTHING there is to know about the book or show. They will often litter their posts with links, exact dialogue, interview quotes, etc. They know all the writers, titles, dialogue, and can spell the names of every character. They also know everything that happened back stage. (sigh, I unfortunately have fallen under this category - go read my posts). They are detail oriented and feel at times like a human encyclopedia of trivial information. (Actually I think 95% of my flist is like this - geeks seek each other out. I love the Expert.)

How to handle? Probably best to be nice and thankful. Polite corrections only.

10. The Fact Checker: Requests back-up or proof of everything. They will nit-pick your accuracy on facts. If you misquote a writer - they'll tell you. They will ask for links to any interview you provide - as back-up. And often will provide links that show you are wrong.

How to handle? Thank them for the catch. Back away after that. Possibly even correct your post and credit them. Don't fight them - it doesn't end well. I know it is tempting.

11. The Troll: Often spams discussion threads. Breaks the rules of the thread deliberately. Is there to cause trouble.

How to handle: Summarily Ban. (Disclaimer - I've not banned any trolls on lj.)

12. The Trickster Clown: This person just goofs off, everything is a joke to them. They come up with funny posting names, and don't take anything seriously. The internet is just a big sandbox. They will play pranks and tricks. Post nonsense.

How to handle: Have fun with them. Don't take them personally. Don't react.

13. The Great Debator: Not to be confused with internet bully. They want to win the argument and often are aggressive. They don't stop until they win.

How to handle: Just say it's time we agreed to respectfully disagree. They'll back off.

14. The Internet Bully: Bullies people into seeing their point of view. Often has a bunch of groupies. Who they gather up to invade posts. Their aim is to cause a flame war. Often discussions with the internet bully will end in name-calling. They don't give up. They will harass and will stalk. Can come across self-righteous.

How to handle? Summarily ban. And ignore. Ban their friends if they bring them.

15. The Self-Appointed Defender : This is a fan of a writer, show, character, actor, actress - and they feel the need to swoop to this person's or show's aid. If you so much as frown at it - they will be all over you. Attacking you as if you attacked their baby or puppy.

How to handle? Back away slowly. Do not engage. They will bring reinforcements. Just politely state that you view it differently and that you are sorry you offended them.


Finally...on all discussion boards, blogs, etc...you will be at the mercy of The Moderator - this is the person or persons who moderate and often facilitate the discussion, they may own the site. They make the rules. The site or blog is their personality. If they don't own it, they are friends with or employees of the site. Their job is stop flame wars and keep the peace. And they have a tough job.

How to handle? Be their friend. Respect them. Keep in mind they get all the email messages. And that if a flame war breaks out - it's in their home. Don't piss them off. Don't bully them or spoil them. If you post long posts - thank them and ask if it is okay. They have the power to ban or boot your ass off the forum if you don't behave.

Disclaimer: This is purely based on my own experiences on the net. Mileage may vary. And I've seen these personas on every fan discussion board or forum on the net. The key I've found to surviving an internet discussion is politeness, backing away or leaving when you get angry and never posting in anger, staying away from people who make you crazy or angry.
If you get into a heated discussion and you realize it's going to derail...politely state it is time we agree to disagree. Then leave.

With my brother...whenever we argue, I often think, damn, I need the last word. It's stupid. I know. Having the last word doesn't mean you won. It may just mean the other person got tired of arguing with you or bored of the discussion.

Date: 2012-07-22 11:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] frelling-tralk.livejournal.com
Honestly his reaction after Smashed is why I'm convinced that he is spoiled for Seeing Red and a lot of his current reactions are geared up for expressing the appropriate outrage when that scene comes up. I could well be remembering wrong, but at the time season 6 was airing for the first time there were of course a LOT of people who were very against the idea of Buffy being paired with a vampire without a soul and feeling that she was degrading herself, but at the same time I don't think that anyone was expecting it to get as dark as it did in Dead Things, Seeing Red etc and I certainly don't remember Spike and rape ever being brought up as early as Smashed of all episodes?

Yet apparently Mark is all over the place with comments on how abusive the Smashed sex was and complaining about people treating the topic of rape lightly, and yeah there is no way he's not been spoiled for that particular scene for a looong time now. I could see Smashed preparing an unspoiled viewer for an unhealthy relationship of course, but I don't think the attempted rape was signposted clearly at all as early as that. The fight scene portrayed a super-powered Buffy being more than able to handle herself and throw Spike around as an equal, so nothing about that particular scene would point to insisting that Spike was beating up Buffy and let's start getting really sensitive over how people discuss rape.

Date: 2012-07-22 01:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
You aren't remembering it wrong at all. There are a couple of people whose comments on his thread, elsi and memogirl, that I had to restrain from correcting. They clearly weren't in the fandom in the fall of 2001 or beginning of 2002 or they don't remember. And they are so frigging wrong about the interactions over Wrecked and Smashed. Unfortunately those of us who knew - don't care enough to jump in.

Sure there were fights with the Bangles. But no one knew about the ATTEMPTED rape scene in SR. If you want to see what was going on back then? Visit the ATPO Board archives here:

http://www.atpobtvs.com/existentialscoobies/archives/nov01_p4.html#154

I was on Buffy Cross and Stake spoiler boards which unfortunately don't have saved archives. But I remember no discussion about potential rape until the spoilers were released for Dead Things, and even then? No.

The attempted rape scene came as a shock. The internet exploded. People did not see it coming. Not even the Spikehaters or Spuffyhaters did.

And the conversations regarding Smashed at the time were mainly about Buffy being in charge. I remember critics stating how it was an episode of female empowerment. Scholars with PH.D's wrote and presented papers.

But no, I was on and lurked on 100 sites back then and outside of Bangle specific sites with an agenda - not one mentioned it.

http://www.criticallytouched.com/buffy/6x09_smashed.php

http://www.televisionwithoutpity.com/show/buffy_the_vampire_slayer/smashed.php?page=14

The main thrust of the discussion about then was about sex and whether networks should show it and is rough sex or kinky sex okay, and how dare the hero shag a bad guy. Men raged against it, women loved it.

Mark's reaction to it - indicates that he is spoiled. It's obvious.
Only someone who is spoiled would write the comment he did. If people don't believe he's spoiled? I have a few bridges I can sell them dirt cheap.

Date: 2012-07-22 05:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tomomakimou.livejournal.com
Mark's reaction to it - indicates that he is spoiled. It's obvious.

And now he puts blame on "a very bitter Spike fan". arrgh

Date: 2012-07-22 06:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
Which underlines my problem with him and his mods, they did not take any responsibility for what happened. This means that it won't change.
That it will happen again and again and again.

They clearly don't understand why the kerfuffle happened. Which means it will happen again.


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